Catching light on the near-by hills.

Late afternoon interplay of sunlight on the Tallarook Ranges to which I used PS using the B&W filter via layers to convert to monotone to see the effect. Posts by others have awakened an interest in B&W conversions ( For this you can mainly blame Donald! )
Thanks for viewing and any comments you may care to post.

Re: Catching light on the near-by hills.

Hi Ken,
I like the colour version myself, but I agree Donald has a lot to answer for. I keep trying B&W conversions but can't match the skill of the master.
I love the ‘soft’ feel of the colour version and the way each layer; sky, distant hills, trees all add to the composition.
Well done.

Re: Catching light on the near-by hills.

Originally Posted by ucci

( For this you can mainly blame Donald! )

It weren't me, guv. Honest.

Good on you, Ken. Just experimenting with what can be done in B & W is, I think what it's about. Some people, I know, feel that taking the colour info out must detract from the image. I feel it can actually add a lot into it.

Re: Catching light on the near-by hills.

Thank you all for your helpful comments. What Donald has shown me, despite his as expected modest disclaimer, is that B&W can often produce something more highly dramatic and interesting than the colour version. I hope that this does not sound too pretentious. Of course it does not work in every instance. And the winter colours of these hills are muted. I have tried giving such shots a bit more oomph, with a variety of pp methods only to find that the end result tends to look unreal and a tad garish.
Thank you all for viewing and for taking the time to post helpful feedback.
old ucci